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tv   CNN Tonight with Don Lemon  CNN  August 12, 2020 7:00pm-8:00pm PDT

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as i have said many nights on this program, the united states battling two deadly viruss. covid-19 and race. today, americas got their first taste of how a potential administration of president joe biden and vice president kamala harris would attack the viruss. compared to the three and a half year track record of donald trump. biden and harris addressing the american public this afternoon for the first time as running mates on the democratic ticket. there they are together on stage. in delaware. harris wasted no time strongly stating her reasons for running against the vice president joe biden. and president trump. not attacking harris on policy positions instead going after her by trotting out racist and tropes. tweeting and i quote, it's up on the screen. the housewife will be voting for
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me. they want safety and they are thrilled i ended the long running program where low income housing would invade their neighborhood. biden would reinstall it. in a bigger form. with cory booker in charge. so i had to read that one. not that it needs explaining if it does. there's an issue. i'm sure i don't have to explain. i will. suburban housewife. think about that. that is a phrase right out of the 1950s and 60s. look at this. literally. this is time magazine the cover june 20, 1960. the suburban housewife. the proto-typical housewife. to president trump and probably a will the of other people, is a white woman.
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that is an out dated way of thinking. and quite frankly a dog whistle. because of the race baiting using the words low income housing would invade -- you moe what he means by that right? he really means black americans moving in. don't pretend you are surprised by it. of course that's what he means. why else would he say it? right? and if you're not a black american and says low income and you're a poor person in america. isn't that insulting as well? why would he just single out poor people in america? right. isn't that part of the base? unheard of people. so why is he saying it? because he's talking about black people. the scary black people. and why would he cite cory booker black senator.
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why cory booker? why? why not elizabeth warren. why not bernie sanders. or tim cane. why not any of those? come on. you know why not. the dogs aren't the only ones who are hearing that whistle. trump continued that theme tonight at the white house inferring kamala harris is an angry black woman. especially during the democratic primary races. >> look, he made a choice. he picked her. i watched her. i watched her poll numbers go down to almost nothing. and she left angry, she left mad. it was nobody more insulting to biden than she was. she said horrible things about him. >> go down. boom boom boom.
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like the economy. under president trump. he's also called her nasty and mean. donald trump record on dealing with racial issues in america is quite frankly appalling. he is shown hostility to the black lives matter movement. let's remember this is the third anniversary of of the march on charlottesville. by white supremacists. >> jews will not replace us. >> trump then forever staining his presidency when he said this. >> you also had people that were very fine people. on both sides. you had people in that group -- excuse me. i saw the same pictures as you did. >> defending the nazis. and white supremacist.
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okay. so, here's a contrast for you. i want you to listen to how biden addresses race and the deadly violence in charlottesville. >> racial justice crisis. donald trump seeks feel. carrying torches. faces bulging. it was a wake up call for us as a country. >> and harris is talking about hope in a country torn by racial injustice.
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>> we are as a country. people of every age and color kp creed. finally declaring in one voice they yes, black lives matter. all across the country a whole new generation of children. is growing up hearing the cries for justice. and the chance of hope. on which i was raised. joe likes to say that character is on the ballot. and it's true. when he saw what happened in charlottesville three years ago today he knew we were in a battle for the soul of the nation. >> did you see the contrast there? >> very fine people on both sides. defending nazis. and white supremacists and white nationalists. today more than 1,000 americans died from coronavirus. the 17th straight day the u.s. averaged over a thousand deaths from the disease. since the out break of the virus
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more than 165,000 americans have died. it is a crisis taking our loved ones and our friends. but this president has denied its deadly impact on america since day one. >> we have it under control. it's going to be just fine. >> we have it very well under control. we have very little problem in this country at this point. five and those people are recuperating successfully. >> in april when it gets warmer it goes away. >> the coronavirus which is very well under control in our country. we're going down not up. substantiately down. when you have 15 people and it's down to close to zero in a couple days, that's a good job we have done. >> we're doing a great job with it. it will go away. just stay calm. >> the doctors say it will wash
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through. it will flow through. very accurate. you'll find in a number of weeks. emergency authorization for hydroxychloroquine. i say it, what do you have to lose? take it. it will be wonderful. it will be so beautiful. it will be a gift from heaven. and it works. >> supposing you brought the light inside the body which you can do through the skin or in some other way. and i think you said you'll test that too? sounds interesting. and i see the disinfectant. it knocks it out in a minute. one minute. and is there a way we can do something like that? by injection inside or almost a cleaning. it gets in the lungs. >> all that is true. none taken out of context. that's what he said. his own words.
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biden making it clear he and kamala harris will tackle the other deadly virus. that's covid-19. they'll do it head on. to get it under control and fix the economic devastation it has brought to the u.s. >> we have a public health crisis. in court trying to do away with healthcare. with more than 5 million reported infections. 165,000 people dead and climbing. consequence of covid-19. and still, months later, no real leadership or plan. from the president of the united states. how to get this pandemic under control. no real help from the states and local government trying to fill the vacuum of leadership from the white house. no real help for children and educators for small businesses and front line workers.
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that hold our country together. instead, he's issuing executive orders. and making promises that in the end will defund the social security system. insisting that this virus will disappear. the joe biden and kamala harris administration will have a comprehensive plan to meet the challenge of covid-19. and turn the corner on this pandemic. we just need a president and vice president willing to lead and take responsibility. the president says it's not my fault. >> when other countries are following the science, trump pushed miracle cures he saw on fox news. while other countries were flattening the curve, he said the virus would just poof go away. quote, like a miracle. >> 83 days. that's not long.
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83 days until election day and already the contrasts between the two tickets at the u.s. battle the twin viruss, covid-19 and race. could not be anymore striking. i'll bring in cnn white house correspondent. good evening to you. thank you for joining. the biden harris ticket made the debut today. taking on president trump and so far the white house wasn't prepared to handle it. >> what was interesting is he had the 24 hour period to really try to form late some kind of line of attack against the senator harris and we didn't really see that. yesterday we talked about the president allies after it was decided that kamala harris was going to be joe biden's running mate and said he needs time, he'll think of a line of attack. we didn't see any clear line of strategy from the president. it seems like based on what several sources said they think
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the president is having some trouble defining her and similar to the way that for the last several months they had trouble defining joe biden. do they paint him as a leftist or is kamala harris the overzealous prosecutor. that struggled with that as the message they tried to portray about where democrats are what the president is and contrast to them. it doesn't seem to be something stuck yet. that could change of course. senator harris doesn't have a perfect track record. there's something potentially they could use. so far they have not really been able to stick any kind of successful line of attack against her that we have seen. >> interesting. this one has been quite perplexing to me. i wonder how he is explaining his sexist suburban housewife tweet. low income housing is invading neighborhoods. not everybody can be rich. and so he's not only insulting
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housewives, people in suburban areas and poor people who may not be able to afford to live in the big homes with lawns. how is he explaining this? >> how out dated the president's thinking on matters can be. referring to women as housewives is not how women want to be referred to these days. the president didn't learn the lessons from 2018 from the midterms where suburban women abandoned republicans and put democrats in control of the house on capitol hill. read the tweet and what the president is referring to by saying he saved the sur you shalls is the obama rule he undid recently. meant to promote diversity in communities where they get federal grants and money like that. there was no evidence that rule led to an increase in crime in the areas. the president drew that text anyway. without citing evidence. this is the argument aids are saying you have a real problem
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with women voters and you need to work on that before november. and this is the president's way of addressing it. even though strategists and aids have said focus on covid-19. the president says things like this. talking about how he has the housewife vote. yesterday his first line of attack on kamala harris was calling her a nasty woman. and saying she had been disrespectful to brett kavanaugh going through the hearing for the supreme court. the president portrays women politically aligned with him skm those who are not. >> i wonder how every day people trump voter not rich people many don't live in the suburbs can't afford to live there. how they'll respond to him in insulting them. that's a question for me. i should ask them. not you. i understand that there's going to be a new bob wood ward book about the trump white house. we have details on that. what is it? >> new details tonight from the
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colleagues. this book is going to come out september 15. a crucial day because it's shortly before the election. and if you remember his last book which was titled fear. it was damning about the white house and the stories not only about what donald trump himself did but what aids did. and ways they went out of the their way to stop him from making certain decisions or back off certain moves. whether it came to economy or national security. this book is titled rage. we are told. it's coming out september 15. and what's really interesting about this one is remember the last book we reported the president was really upset that aids didn't come to him and told him about the request to interview him. that has changed because according to sources in this book, bob sat down with the president over a dozen times to interview him. here at the white house, mar-a-lago and new jersey. it's a lot of one on one material he is going to be working with on decisions the
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president made about black lives matter. the economy, national security, everything really over the last several months. it should be interesting to read before the election. >> at the white house. where she has been stationed and going to be throughout the election. get your rest now while you can. if you can. thank you. there's only a small number of school districts already open for the school year. thousands of students and staff are quarantined because of the hundreds of positive coronavirus cases reported in those districts. what you need to know before sending your kids back to school. can it help with snoring? i've never heard snoring. exactly. no problem... and done save 50% on the sleep number 360 limited edition smart bed. plus 0% interest for 36 months. ends monday.
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parents, listen to this. 2,000 students, teachers and staff on quarantine because of at least 230 positive coronavirus cases reported in schools that they opened up for in person learning. and the majority of districts in the country haven't even started a school year yet. here to discuss, the director for child health behavior and development at seattle children's hospital. doctor, thank you, good evening. you were here last night.
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glad to have you back. >> it's a pleasure. >> the white house released new recommendations for schools. very vague. hygiene tips and encourage mask ts. but don't require it. everyone should do a self-health assessment every morning. is this enough guidance for administrators to really reopen safely? >> it's funny, i didn't get the breaking news alert. is there a plan coming out of the white house? this isn't a plan. it's a directive. and worse it's a directive that is based on a political agenda. not science or public health. the reason we're in this situation to begin with is because there's been a complete lack of national strategy to contain this pandemic in the first place. the people that are paying the biggest the heaviest price for this today and in the future are the children that aren't going back to school. that should be our prime objective. that should be the guiding principle to get children to
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school. why are bars open? why are restaurants open? and schools are not. >> i want to talk about the recommendations or you said directives. you say the people suffering the most are children. why, quickly. why you believe that. >> to be hon nest with you, the greeks have a saying there are problems that money can fix. we can make small businesses whole. we can make individual people financially solvent. many countries just guaranteed basic income to people to stay home. it's not so easy to fix children's social development. emotional development and trajectories after we derail them. children need to be in school. especially young children. because distance learning doesn't work for them. so, if we're in a situation right now which we are in, where primary school children in many parts of the country cannot go
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back to school because we deem it unsafe, we are going to keep them home for six months, a year. a year and a half. expecting basically parents to home school them. which is not an option for many parents who are essential workers and have to go to work and can't be home. or an option for parents who don't feel competent to teach students or special needs children for whom really need specialized instruction. so, we're throwing our children under the bus. >> or fpoor parents. or don't have the income, maybe one screen or no screens in the home. so, one of the recommendations was avoid large gatherings. how do you do that when there's 30 kids in a class? it doesn't make sense. even sanjay gupta is not senning his kids back to school.
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they are less likely to get sick but explained why he lives, georgia positiveivity rate over 11% the rate of viral spread is increasing and kids can spread it. how important is it to know what is happening in your community? san jay tuned in, parents should be as well. it's important. >> it's immensely important. i read his piece. the two points. you eluded is that he is in georgia. which is a hot spot now. and, second is his kids are older. and distance learning is at least feasible for them. so one of the mistakes we're making in this school debate, is that we're speaking about schools saying should they open or close? which is to say we're treating kindergarteners the same as high schoolers and treating children in florida which have the
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highe highest prevalence in the world as iowa where they have low rates. it's a disservice. we need to get every child back as soon as possible. that might require we lock everything else down. the increase that we have seen in all these communities can't be blamed on school. schools have been closed. yet the solution seems to be let's keep schools closed. but keep bars and restaurants and tattoo parlors open. keep having political rallies. how is that the priority? in what universe does that make sen sense. >> this one that we live in now. it's unbelievable. thank you so much. it's reality. it doesn't make sense. don't get it wrong what i was saying. be safe. i want you to listen to this. >> completely corrupt. most extreme radical, far left.
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>> very nasty. >> that's not all they're saying about kamala harris. take this. they can't seem to get on the same page about what they just don't like about her. stay with us. struggling to clean tough messes with wipes? try mr. clean magic eraser sheets. just wet, squeeze and erase icky messes in microwaves and on stovetops for an amazing clean, get the power of mr. clean magic eraser in disposable sheets. you know when your dog is itching for a treat.
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can your internet do that? xfinity xfi can because it's simple, easy, awesome. get advanced security free with the xfi gateway. download the xfi app today. well take this. the president, his campaign, allies at fox news. all grasping at straws on the offensive against kamala harris. trump said she would be a fine choice as democratic nominee. she had been on the short list for longer than that. so with all that time to come with come up with something, why is this the first line of attack? >> she was extraordinarily nasty to kavanaugh and plus she was very nasty to one of the reasons
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that surprised me she was probably naster than even pocahontas to joe biden. shes disrespectful to joe biden and i thought she was the meanest, the most horrible most disrespectful of anybody in the u.s. senate. >> like kindergarten. cnn reports that it took president trump less than two minutes to reach for the word nasty. when reacting to the harris news. and the trump campaign can't seem to get a story straight on her criminal justice record. on a call with reporters republican senator representing the campaign said she judges harris to be untrustworthy on law and order issues. moepts later on the same call, cnn reports that trump campaign adviser piercen said that harris's record as california ag
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was -- and went too far in his treatment of suspects and convicts. which one is it? too tough on crime? or in the tough enough? and then there's state media. where they have taken everything but the kitchen sink approach against the vice president nominee. including but not limited to sexist smears and more than one person not even bothering to get kamala harris's name right. >> she's just not that exciting to african-americans. >> i wouldn't trust her. i think she's very ambitious. >> this pick solidifies the most extreme radical, far left out of the mainstream ticket of any major political party in american history. >> she's the worst nightmare as a prosecutor. she was and some cases overly lenient. and other cases rekick lousily
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strict and strict. >> it's pronounced comma. like the punctuation. i have heard everything. >> so what. >> kamala. out of respect for somebody who will be on the national ticket. pronouncing her name right is a bare minimum. >> i'm disrespecting her by mispronouncing her name unintentionally. so it begins. you can't criticize her kamala harris. or whatever. >> joe biden was attacked by her. name three things she sincerely believes? >> names can be so hard to pronounce sometimes. even names of people who have been on the scene for years. say it with me. kamala. harris. next kamala harris is snapping back at president trump and her first appearance with joe biden. as a democratic ticket.
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kamala harris making the first appearance as joe biden's running mate and drawing a line a clear line in the sand between the democratic ticket and president trump. >> we're reeling from the worst public health crisis in the century. the president's mismanagement of the pandemic has plunged us into the worst economic crisis since the great depression. and we're experiencing a moral reckoning with racism and systemic injustice that has brought a new coalition of conscience. to the streets of our country demanding change. america is crying out for
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leadership. >> let's bring in a "new york times" foreign affairs columnist and author of from beirut to jerusalem. going after trump painting this at a fight for the conscience of america. you say she's bringing excitement to a lot of people. how big of a boost is this for biden? it's a big boost because i think that she and biden together really represent and are touching something very deep in the country. something i think that a lot of the african-american women in south carolina who really lifted biden up and made him the democratic nominee. that's a transition. from a country that was a white majority dominated by white males. to a country that is going to be minority, majority. dominated by a very diverse
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coalition of different americans and men and women. we're in the transition. what we have seen in the last six months is that transition can happen smoothly or violently. and happen by consensus or not. i think that what biden and kamala harris represent is a team. is the hope that we can make that transition they will be the bridge between that white majority america to a minority majority america. i think that is the hope here. i think that's what is touching people. >> president trump is attacking harris calling her angry, nasty. weak on facts. his campaign and surrogates are using racist attacks. are we looking at the ugliest race for the white house in modern political history? they'll do a lot to top 2016. but my question is there. >> put donald trump and social net works together and you'll
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get real ugly. here's what struck me in listening to biden and the harris press conference. i imagine i was in one of the focus groups when you ask to turn the dial when you hear something you like. or the other way if you don't. when i turned the dial, it's when biden began by listing their agenda. what did he say, our number one agenda is that we will have a plan to deal with this virus. i'm really believe when the fall comes, parents don't have kids in school. the economic assistance is not sufficient. renters are being thrown out. and donald trump is out there saying she was nasty to kavanaugh? i'm sorry. that is not going to fly. it's always been about the virus stupid. unless you take care of the virus, people will not be in school. people will not have jobs. restaurants will not have
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customers. donald trump never understood that. and that i think those chickens will come home to roost this fall. that's why all this mud that they're throwing at them. none is sticking. that's not what americans are worried about. they are worried about school and jobs. >> he hasn't read the room or country. completely tone deaf. that usually -- lack of self-awareness. that usually is very hurtful for people when reality smacks them in the face. i have to ask you april you called on biden to name the cabinet at the convention. his cabinet is fan across the political spectrum. do you think that could happen? >> i really do. i think again i have always felt -- trump and biden each have a kind of teflon. trumps is mud. he is so covered in mud you throw more mud and something stucks. the notion of a stain is an ox
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si moron. biden's teflon is a sense he's a decent guy who can bring people together. i think if i'm listing concerns of people in the country. number one is the coronavirus. number two is the fear that we are ripping ourselves apart as a country. i wrote about this this week. we're becoming divided as sectarian and describably as the middle east. that's a deep concern of people. i think another reason that the democrats in going back to south carolina lifted biden off the matt, they believed he was a guy who can pull the country together and his partnering with kamala harris reenforced that. that is the most dangerous threat to donald trump. i think a will the of americans really carry that fear. >> thank you. be well. see you soon. so, we talked about the dog
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whistle of the president on race and people low income people. that's why you need to tune in to my pod cast. silence is not an option. taking on hard conversations about race in america being black in america. find it on apple pod cast or your favorite app. we'll talk about sports. it drops 4:00 in the morning. don't miss it. a father and son. both doctors. died weeks apart from each other from the coronavirus. their family says they died heros. i'll speak with some of the family members. next. (sprinkler sound) (piano starts) ♪ father wears his sunday best ♪ mother's tired, she needs a rest ♪ ♪ the kids are playing up downstairs ♪ ♪ our house, it has a crowd ♪ there's always something happening ♪ ♪ and it's usually quite loud ♪ ♪ our house, in the middle of our street ♪
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♪ our house, in the middle of our street ♪
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i really want everyone please sit down approximate pay attention to this. it's an important segment we're about to do. the coronavirus death toll in this country now near 166,000 people. for tw weeks more than 1,000 americans have died from the virus. every single day. numbers are startling. they're not just numbers they are people. mothers, fathers, childrens, aunts, uncles, neighbors. a father and son from florida. doctors. these beloved doctors died from coronavirus just five weeks apart. and i'm honored to speak with the family tonight. thank you so much. i really appreciate all of you joining us tonight. >> thanks for having us. >> your family is dealing with two tremendous losses. the loss of your husband and father-in-law. tell me about your husband carlos. he was on the front line of the
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pandemic. >> my husband is my hero. i miss him very much. he was a very kind person. he would go out of the way to help any human being. at any time of the day. he would wake up and go to the hospital and help anybody. when it was the covid-19 section he would tell me i he goes no, these are my family and he spent every day going to the hospital on the front line helping another human being, and i'm real he devastated losing him, but he was a great doctor and my hero forever. >> when did he first get sick? >> he got sick on father's day. >> wow. >> father's day -- >> yeah and -- >> and sunday morning at around 3:00 in the morning i had to call rescue on him. >> charlie, what were you
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saying? >> i was saying yeah, we actually had to admit them both to the hospital on the same day. my grandfather was admitted around 1:00 in the morning and my father around 3:30 the same day. >> before i move onto the rest of the family. you had covid-19, as well. i have to ask how you're feeling. >> i'm feeling great, thank you. i'm already negative, thank god. >> great, great. charlie, let me bring you back. what precautions were your dad, your grandfather and the whole family taking to protect against covid-19? >> i mean, he was real cautious when my dad would go into the hospital, he would wear two masks, the full ppe, the face mask, the gown, everything. he was as cautious as you can be. you can cover up as much as you want, there is always a slight chance you can contract the virus and unfortunately, my dad did. >> yeah. your grandfather fled cuba.
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he learned english and became an ob/gyn and practiced for 45 years. he treated celebrities like salina cruz. it's an incredible life story. >> yeah, he actually delivered all of us, as well. he delivered all his grandchildr grandchildren. >> it sounds like your dad and grandfather were really pillars of the community. are you getting an outpouring of support? >> absolutely. we've had a bunch of love and support from our county and friends and all over the world they are reaching out to us from patients of my father and grandfather reaching out saying hey, your grandfather delivered me years ago, your father are looked as as heroes and like i was telling my mom, all of us
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always saw my dad as a hero and now the whole world sees that. here he did put his life on the line for patients and got that from my grandfather, my grandfather did the same thing. they truly were great to a patient and come home to be the perfect family man. >> kevin, they talked about the kind of people they were. they would help anybody and go to the hospital and, you know, lasette talked about how he treated the patients, right? kevin, they were both doctors. what would they be telling the publishing right now about predaugss and whpr precautions and what you should be doing? >> not leave your house unless absolutely necessary, wear a mask, cover your eyes and definitely to not gather in any type of large groups and to stay
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at home and be safe because you never know how hard this virus can impact you until it reaches home. >> kevin, what do you want other people to know about this virus and about what your family is going through because gazelle said they're heroes. >> i would like people to know that this virus is no joke and under six weeks, it completely destroyed my dad's lungs. my grandfather died from the virus in under six days and he survived so much before this. you know, even the medicines they have out now, there is that guarantee they can treat you at the end of the day. >> yeah. >> lasette, what is holding your family together right now? >> faith in god and strength and i always pray to god to give me support. they are both in medical school and my daughter is in nursing, god give me the strength to finish their medicine career and
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my daughter a nurse and that's what is keeping me going. >> so you know, you're inspired by your father and your grandfather, both of you or all of you. this hasn't changed your desire, the will to be doctors and nurses? >> i mean, it's the oath a physician takes. we put everything on the line to save our patients like firefighters go into the line of duty. they will do whatever it takes to help people out of the fires. we do it in the same way without hesitation. we go in and have to treat patients and sometimes you have to sacrifice. that's what it entails. >> it breaks my heart my dad and grandfather won't be able to see me become a doctor, but i'm going to do everything in my power to continue their legacy and give great care to people here in south florida. >> as a business, they always said they were old school. they treated each patient with
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love -- >> like family. >> like family. >> my husband would wake up at any time of the night and go to the hospital and treat patients and he would actually with covid he would go inside and do a physical on the patient. he said i have to hear their lungs and touch them to make sure they're okay. >> he never hesitated. >> he gave his life for them. >> well, listen, you are a beautiful family. you're a very good looking family and have a beautiful home and you have a great relationship and the strength in order i just want to thank everyone for coming on. we have kevin, kevin, thank you on the end, lasette, charlie and gazelle. god bless you and the whole world is thinking about you. thank you so much. >> thank you for having us. >> we'll be right back.
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i have the power to lower my blood sugar and a1c. because i can still make my own insulin. and trulicity activates my body to release it like it's supposed to. once-weekly trulicity is for type 2 diabetes. it's not insulin. it starts acting from the first dose. and it lowers risk of heart attack, stroke, or death in people with known heart disease or multiple risk factors. trulicity isn't for people with type 1 diabetes or diabetic ketoacidosis. don't take trulicity if you're allergic to it, you or your family have medullary thyroid cancer, or have multiple endocrine neoplasia syndrome type 2. stop trulicity and call your doctor right away if you have an allergic reaction, a lump or swelling in your neck, severe stomach pain, changes in vision, or diabetic retinopathy. serious side effects may include pancreatitis. taking trulicity with sulfonylurea or insulin raises low blood sugar risk. side effects include nausea, diarrhea, vomiting, belly pain, and decreased appetite, which lead to dehydration and may worsen kidney problems.
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we're committed to helping ensure trulicity is available and affordable. learn more at trulicity.com. california's economic challenges are deepening. frontline workers stretched too thin. our nurses and medical professionals in a battle to save lives. our schools, in a struggle to safely reopen, needing money for masks and ppe, and to ensure social distancing. and the costs to our economy, to our state budget?
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mounting every day. we need to provide revenues now, to solve the problems we know are coming.

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